Tuesday, 10 July 2012
Treat yourself… with Tropicanna!
Garden Gate magazine features Tropicanna® cannas in its article, highlighting their bold texture and striking colors.
Author Jim Childs says “If there’s one reason cannas should be in every garden, it’s for their bold texture.
It’s the first thing you see when you look at them. Of course, the striped foliage of Tropicanna® (‘Phasion’) helps hold your attention too…they make a spectacular show!”
The author’s favorite spot for planting cannas is where the sun can shine through their leaves - so colorful stripes like Tropicanna’s become even more intense; and he adds that, besides their stunning look, cannas are also easy to grow and maintain.
Tropicanna cannas are available in a range of colors, each with its own dramatic effect. Original Tropicanna has brilliant red, pink, orange and green striped foliage, whilst Tropicanna Gold has striking yellow and gold striped leaves, and Tropicanna Black has deep, rich burgundy/black foliage, which gives any garden a gorgeous moody glow.
So advise your customers to treat themselves with Tropicanna® cannas – and they too can make a stunning statement in their garden!
Best regards,
Anthony Tesselaar Plants
Wednesday, 16 May 2012
Fancy a Festival in your Garden?!
Writer Erle Nickel says that “ornamental grasses have firmly established themselves as key elements in the modern garden, and their ranks keep swelling. That may be because ornamental grasses offer many rewards. They showcase distinctively beautiful foliage; the taller species add motion to your garden as they ripple in the wind; and they provide almost year-round interest.”
Festival Burgundy is a perfect complement for these popular ornamental grasses. Its distinctive burgundy color and cascading form provides a dynamic focal point in the garden or it can be a great accent plant in garden beds and, when planted in a large decorative container, it adds the wow factor to patios, entrances and pool areas.
Tuesday, 8 May 2012
Tropicanna at a famous landmark
Friday, 13 April 2012
Fairy Magnolia Blush
Fairy Magnolia Blush is a startling free flowering evergreen bush or hedge, laden with fragrant flowers at this time of year.
Reaching mature heights of three to four meters and widths of 1.5 – 2 meters it makes a model hedging shrub for both ornamental and screening purposes and looks stunning presented in a single tub.
With blush lilac/pink flowers from March to May and dark green foliage it is a stunning and robust addition to any garden or conservatory.
Bred in New Zealand by the reputed plant breeder, Mark Jury, the shrub’s evergreen, bushy appearance, winter weather tolerance and general resistance to disease ensures it as a garden staple.
Specifications:
· Flower size - 60mm diameter
· Spacing – 1.5m apart for a loose screen or 1m to create a hedge
· Temperature – trialed to -15°C
· Pests – no major issues
· Special care - performs best with good drainage, though needs moisture when establishing
· Pruning - can be trained to single leader or trimmed as a bush, hedge, topiary or espalier
· Soil – suitable for a range of soil types, but prefers well worked friable soils. Avoid heavily waterlogged conditions
· Water - requires moderate moisture levels over summer, but can handle drier conditions once established. Occasional deep watering recommended.
Available April/May 2012, SRSP: £37.00 per 5 litre pot.
Monday, 2 April 2012
Melbourne International Flower and Garden Show
Sustainability, Style and Stunning Seasonal Weather.
Once again I am reminded of why we live in Melbourne (voted one of the world's most liveable cities on multiple occasions) as I enjoy fantastic Autumn weather with sunny days and mild temperatures combined with inspiring atmosphere of the world renowned Melbourne International Flower and Garden Show (entering its 17th year in 2012 and regarded as the largest and most successful horticultural event in the Southern Hemisphere).
The show is staged within the Grand Dame of Melbourne - the world heritage listed Royal Exhibition Building and beautiful surrounding Carlton Gardens (right in the centre of Melbourne City), the Show is well established in the psyche of Australians as a "must see" event with visitors from far and wide (including international tourists) making the trip to see the show .
Featuring the best landscape and floral talent that Australia has to offer the Melbourne International Flower & Garden Show is a celebration of Australian lifestyle and our great outdoors and this year's popular themes have been Sustainability and Style; combining both to inspire even the most novice of gardeners to think about how they can improve their garden at home.
Highlights for me from the show in the attached images are:
· The repurposing of tires, old cans and wheelbarrows to make an interesting and entertaining water feature; plus the use of pallets and discarded beds to create raised vegetable beds.
· Inspirational Floral Design with the conventional interpreted in flowers / fruit and root vegetables – I am not sure about the longevity of a wedding dress made of Garlic but it would certainly protect the bride against cold & flu + keep the vampires away.
· Amazing combinations of Australian stone and plants all demonstrating the possibilities for us to use our gardens as an extension of the house i.e. an outside room that just flows.
· Finally a real treat was seeing one of my favourite plants (and one of our own) Tropicanna included throughout the Carlton Gardens looking resplendent with the sun shining through their amazing foliage.
Once again I return home from the show with a thousand ideas of what improvements can be made in my own garden and then spend the rest of the year trying to decide where the design ideas can be replicated in my own surrounds; and how I can start these multiple projects in between the travel around the world required for our business.
If you have a bucket list and you are a gardener then time to make sure that visiting this show is included as one of the key items to be placing a line through / tick against as apart from the Show this time of year also has Melbourne hosting the month long Comedy Festival (of the same ilk as Edinburgh and Toronto), the food and wine festival and multiple other cultural activities such as the launch of our Australian Football season making it an incredible time to be visiting Melbourne.
Friday, 9 March 2012
IPM Essen in Germany
In any event another year has passed and as usual the team at Tesselaar faced the usual challenge of dragging ourselves off the beach and overcoming the post Christmas wish that our holidays were longer to make our annual pilgrimage to the mecca of Horticulture - IPM Essen in Germany.
This year’s show, like those in the years preceding it, was a source of inspiration that continues to surprise me each year with the innovation, presentation and sheer beauty of the industry I am lucky enough to work in.
Despite the seasonal challenges (it’s cold and snowy and certainly not the best time to be showing plants), working with perishable items and constant changes in fashion and peoples preferences; each year the displays and the presentation of material continue to motivate us to do that little bit more and continually improve our offerings.
Attached are some images that I couldn’t help pick out of the thousands of pictures I took for their creativity, colour and sometimes fun way of presenting plants and how they can be used to brighten our lives.
A few comments about the images chosen:
Clogs on the wall – the ultimate way to make sure discarded items find a second life / use in beautifying surroundings or brightening someone’s day.
Kombi Classic – who said “Flower Power”, had gone after the 60’s; it was just waiting for its chance to be reborn as retro fashion.
Mother in Laws are not all bad - An old favourite used innovatively and I don’t know what goes into braiding or plaiting succulents; (especially as a father who struggles to do his daughters hair and encourages her to wear caps when Mum is away) but these simple succulents have a wow factor.
Blocks of Colour – this was my personal favourite display from IPM. It was simple, cheap to construct and added so much fun and the ability to block colour and cross merchandise for retailers in a way that had instant pick me up appeal. This is something that would even have me buying horticultural products without an industry discount.
Hedge trimmer’s nightmare – As a gardener who has large hedges surrounding my property andEnglish Box hedge borders throughout, I could not begin to contemplate the amount of work that goes into making the beetle and maintaining it.
Not something for everyone but it certainly has its place and carried the galloping horse qualification e.g. you had to stop and admire it. Well that is it for another year and hope you find the inspiration from the images to get gardening and look at ways to brighten your surrounds for the year ahead.
Well that is it for another year and hope you find the inspiration from the images to get gardening and look at ways to brighten your surrounds for the year ahead.